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OMAHA STAR
THE
Proudly Serving Our Community for Over 80 Years Dedicated to the Service of the People that NO Good Cause Shall Lack a Champion and that Evil Shall Not Go Unopposed
~ Chance The Rapper
Nebraska’s Only Black Owned Newspaper Vol. 81 - No. 17 Omaha, Nebraska
Friday, August 23, 2019
Education is the most important investment anyone can make.
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“Stakes Is High” for a Dallas Drum Major for Justice – and The Rest of Us By Terri L. Crawford, J.D. If you want to say I’m a drum major, say I was a drum major for justice … peace … and righteousness. All of the other shallow things will not matter.” – Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (1964) Every generation has its drum majors, and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who was socially conscious far ahead of his time, is one we often make comparisons to. “We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” Dr. King famously penned these words while confined in jail in Birmingham, Ala., having been arrested for peacefully protesting racial injustice. Those were his prophetic words from the past. Social justice requires the tireless effort of people who are committed to making our world a more inclusive, equitable, and justice-minded place, and yes it takes drum majors to lead the way. Who will answer the call for a new generation? There are many, but one in particular hails from Dallas, Texas. He is one who can be described
as a Prophetic Activist, a poet and a pastor, and he is the epitome of a drum major for justice for Generation X and Millennials. What manner of man is this? This man is The Reverend Dr. Michael W. Waters, founding pastor of Joy Tabernacle African Methodist Episcopal Church in Dallas, Texas. As a pastor and activist, Michael Waters has his own unique blend of hip-hop, racial consciousness and social justice leadership that speaks to the masses of an awakened generation whose battle cry is to “stay woke.” If you have not read “Stakes Is High – Race, Faith and Hope for America,” you should. In the book, Michael W. Water takes us on a captivating, painfully familiar journey. Told from a unique African Methodist Episcopal perspective, Michael Waters juxtaposes historical hurts within a contemporary social context as it relates to the Black experience in America, socially, politically and theologically. As a bearer of the Baby Boomers’ legacy, with a great deal of pride, Michael W. Waters, is also instilled with a dedication to social justice, perhaps in good measure by his parents
and grandparents (you have to read the book!). He is a drum major that seeks to collaborate when possible to resolve social problems. He champions a cause that many Boomers, view as religiously inspired and divinely ordered. While many Millennials view his platform as intrinsic to humanity, invoked within individuals within religious and secular segments alike. There is without a doubt a shared embrace of social justice that is likely to ameliorate the distinctive orientation that each generation has towards it. Each generation has been overwhelmingly dedicated to social justice. Where there is injustice, we all want to respond, whether in-person, online, or through power of the purse. We each realize, there are challenges that must be met with urgency for concrete solutions. While hope for a better future abounds, the wheels of progress at times turn very slowly. However, there are things that are within reach. For example, criminal justice reform is receiving bipartisan attention even as the number of casualties grows. But with real commitment to address this one facet of inequality, other areas are likely to
After Five Years, N.Y. Police Officer Who Chokes Eric Garner to Death on Video is Finally Fired
be positively impacted as well. In the age of the first black president, we know that political power can create change. Even in the absence of a fully-functioning Voting Rights Act, we have to realize that our power to shift the status quo lies not only in the streets, but in every place where that status quo is exclusionary, by deliberate design or disparate impact. Michael Waters knows the power of this principle firsthand. In Stakes Is High, he intersects hair-raising and soul-stirring accounts of killings as a result of police brutality and racial hatred with excerpts of speeches and sermons. Waters’ unique perspective places you on front line of community responses, protests, rallies, and vigils against police brutality, and contains a plea to the reader to not be an innocent bystander, but to implicate ourselves in the fight for racial justice and equity for all Americans. The good news, UNO, the Omaha Star and The Reader are partnering to bring Rev. Dr. Michael W. Waters to Omaha, Nebraska on September 9. This free community event will be begin at 6:30 p.m. at UNO’s Barbara
Waters
Weitz Community Engagement Center (2nd floor). Stakes Is High will be available to sale and Waters has agreed to sign books after his appearance. The struggle continues and Stakes Is High is a call to action for all of us. Dr. Terri L. Crawford, B.A., M.A, J.D ; University of Nebraska Omaha, Department of Black Studies - Adjunct and Graduate Professor; Political Awareness and Involvement Chair, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. (OAC), Policy Director League of Women Voters Greater Omaha, Omaha Star – Staff Writer
New Jesuit Academy Principal Commissioned Jesuit Academy commissioned their new principal, Glenn Mitchell, last week. Mitchell will serve as the 6th principal of the Academy. The commissioning ceremony took place during the Mass of the Holy Spirit, led by Fr. Kevin Shneider, wherein the entire student body & faculty blessed him. After the Mass concluded, they all celebrated at a reception held in Mitchell’s honor.
The Crippling Effect Another Recession Could Have on Black America, Explained By Lauren Victoria Burke NNPA Newswire Contributor On Aug. 19, New York City Police Commissioner James O’Neill announced the firing of Officer Daniel Pantaleo. Pantaleo choked Eric Garner, 43, to death on a sidewalk in Staten Island, N.Y., on July 17, 2014, after Pantaleo stopped Garner for selling loose cigarettes. The video of Garner begging for his life and repeating the words “I can’t breathe” eleven times, catapulted the case into the national spotlight and made it an often-mentioned example of police brutality. Pantaleo was later assigned to desk duty and had his salary raised. Five months after the Garner killing, a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict Pantaleo. Then-District Attorney Dan Donovan made the decision and was later elected to Congress. In his Aug. 19 announcement, Commissioner O’Neill said he expects rank and file officers to be upset with him for firing Pantaleo. “If I was still a cop, I would probably be mad at me.” Police in New York have long been accustomed to winning political battles in public and rarely does the Commissioner
admit mistakes by individual officers. “In this case, the unintended consequence of Mr. Garner’s death must have a consequence of its own,” O’Neill stated. “There are absolutely no victors here today,” he added. “After five long years, justice finally breathes. But firing this guy is just the beginning,” wrote Professor Ibram Kendi of American University moments after the news was released. The head of the police union in New York had another view. “He will lose his police department,” said Patrick Lynch, president of the city’s Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association. Eric Garner’s death on video at the hands of Pantaleo occurred less than a month before the shooting death of unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. by police Officer Darren Wilson. (Lauren Victoria Burke is an independent journalist and writer for NNPA as well as a political analyst and strategist as Principal of Win Digital Media LLC. She may be contacted at LBurke007@gmail. com and on twitter at @LVBurke)
By Bruce C.T. Wright
“What the hell do you have to lose?” Donald Trump the presidential candidate famously asked that question to Black voters while appealing for the support of African Americans almost two years ago to the day. The seemingly never-ending stream of negative answers ever since has been playing themselves out in the most perilous of ways. The latest response to that fateful question has materialized itself as an impending recession, fears of which were, of course, being downplayed by the president, who many people blame for a looming economic crisis. As a result, a clearer picture was emerging of which groups would be most affected by the first recession in a decade. And by “groups,” I mean Black people. The fact of the matter was that the effects of the Great Recession that began in late 2007 have never dissipated fully, or at all. And that was especially true for Black people, who have disproportionately fallen short when it comes to homeownership, credit, employment and earning wages overall, among other key economic indicators. The collision of those factors in 2019 means that Black folks should rightfully brace the hardest for another recession, which, economists say, is a matter of when, See Recession continued on page 3
Terence “Bud” Let us pray that students Stakes Is High Crawford parade Grand and faculty enjoy a safe, author coming Marshall – Sept. 2. to Omaha! productive school year. See In the Village for details. See article above.